Richard Borowski, Leeds University Centre for African Studies

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Using International students as a global learning
resource in the primary classroom
Richard Borowski
Leeds University Centre for African Studies
Leeds University Centre for African Studies
LUCAS is an interdisciplinary centre within the
University of Leeds that brings together
academics with a shared interest to promote
African Studies
•
Under-graduate and post-graduate
modules
•
Conferences, lectures and seminars
•
Schools Outreach Project
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
LUCAS Schools Project
Aim
To provide young people with an
alternative perspective of Africa
that challenges their stereotypical
perceptions of the continent and
its peoples.
Approach
To recruit and train African postgraduate students to deliver activity days
in local primary schools to young people.
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Perceptions of Africa
Africa Maps
Africa Maps are a way of assessing
initial perceptions of Africa and its
peoples.
Have a look at the Africa maps
completed by Year 5 and 6 pupils.
Identify any similarities that could
indicate where the pupils obtained
their information about Africa.
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Perceptions of Africa
Hot and Sunny
Disney Film
Fair Trade
Water Aid
Exotic Culture
Wildlife Programmes
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Perceptions of Africa
The Danger of a Single Story
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
The Danger of a Single Story
52.9%
38.4%
73.2%
39.9%
58.0%
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
The Danger of a Single Story
There
People
areinmany
Africa
skyscrapers
use
mobile
phones
in Africa
There
is little
food
in Africa
Percentage
60%
40%
50%
50%
40%
30%
40%
30%
30%
20%
20%
20%
10%
10%
10%
0%
Strongly
Disagree
Disagree Don’t
Know
DisagreeDon’t
Don’tKnow
Agree
Agree
Agree
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Strongly
Strongly
Strongly
Agree
Agree
Agree
Perceptions of Africa
Chinua Achebe
‘People go to Africa and confirm what they
already have in their heads and so they fail
to see what is there in front of them. This is
what people have come to expect. It's not
viewed as a serious continent. It's a place of
strange, bizarre and illogical things, where
people don't do what common sense
demands.’
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Perceptions of Africa
Bono
‘Africa is a continent in flames. And deep down, if
we really accepted that Africans were equal to us,
we would all do more to put the fire out. We're
standing around with watering cans, when what
we really need is the fire brigade.’
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Linguistic Perceptions
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Linguistic Perceptions
Positive
Positive
Positive
Competency
Sociability
Emotional Words
Words
90.0%
90.0%
80.0%
Percentage
Percentage
Percentage
80.0%
80.0%
70.0%
70.0%
70.0%
60.0%
60.0%
60.0%
50.0%
50.0%
50.0%
40.0%
40.0%
40.0%
30.0%
30.0%
30.0%
20.0%
20.0%
20.0%
10.0%
10.0%
10.0%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
People in Britain
People in Britain
People in Britain
People in Africa
People in Africa
People
in Africa
Location
Location
Location
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
People in Asia
People in Asia
People in Asia
Linguistic Perceptions
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Perceptions of Africa
Said, E (1985) - Orientalism
‘On the one hand there are Westerners, and
on the other there are Arab-Orientals; the
former are (in no particular order) rational,
peaceful, liberal, logical, capable of holding
real values, without natural suspicion; the
latter are none of these things.’
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Perceptions of Africa
Leyens J, (2000) - Infrahumanisation
‘If people think that their group is superior to other
groups, are concerned about their own group, and
attribute different essences to their ingroups and
outgroups, then they will attribute “the” human
essence to their ingroup and infrahumanize outgroups
by attributing to the latter fewer secondary emotions,
or even by denying secondary emotions, which are
considered typically human characteristics.’
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
African Voices
Recruitment
LUCAS recruits MA and PhD
students from Africa. The
students come from a wide
range of African countries
but mainly from English
speaking regions of the
continent.
They are recruited from across the University and study a broad range of
courses such as Development Studies, Education, TESOL, Economics and
Finance, Communication Studies, Sociology, Public Health and even
Chemical & Civil Engineering.
African Voices
Training
The African students recruited
to the project have a very
different experience of schools
- ‘chalk and talk’ lessons and
classrooms with little
technology.
To prepare them to deliver lessons in UK schools they are provided with a
course of training about the UK school system, active learning
methodology, teaching strategies and classroom management and lesson
planning.
African Voices
Delivery
The activity days delivered by the
African post-graduate students
consist of a mixture of activities:
• Introductory activities
• Generic activities about Africa
• Focused country profiles
• Development issues
• Cultural activities
African Voices Methodology
Preconceptions - Acknowledgement of
where our perceptions of Africa come from
=> Class Teacher
Humanisation - Emotional engagement
between students and pupils
=> African Student
Misunderstandings - Challenging
misunderstandings of Africa and its peoples
=> African Student
New Perspectives - Introducing new
knowledge, understanding and perspectives
 African Student
Perceptual Change - Reflecting on what has
been learnt and acknowledging perceptual
change
Ngũgĩ
waBhabha
Thiong’o
Jacques
Gayatri
Spivak
Leyens
Edward
Said
Homi
 Class
Teacher
‘Decolonisation
‘Infrahumanisation’
‘Learning
to of
‘Orientalism’
‘Third
Space’
the Mind’
Unlearning’
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Impact of African Voices Methodology
Role Models - The students challenge the
stereotypical view of an African – highly
educated, relatively wealthy and articulate
Personal Bond - The students become a
‘real’ person that the pupils can relate to
and value what they have to say
Active Learning - Active learning approaches
encourage discussion, critical analysis and
peer group interactions
New Information - The students are a
source of new information about Africa and
present a different perspective of the
continent
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Using International students as a global learning
resource in the primary classroom
Richard Borowski
Leeds University Centre for African Studies
Challenging Misconceptions
Africa True / False Quiz
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Africa True / False Quiz
 Start with any statement
 Decide whether it is true or false
 Go to the statement number
indicated by your decision
 If all your decisions are correct you
will return to the statement you
started with and you will have no
statements left over
 If you have any statements left
over then one or more of your
decisions were incorrect
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Return
Introducing New Perspectives
Diverse Africa
Return
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Diverse Africa - Where am I?
Country 1
Country 2
Country 3
Country 4
Country 5
Country 6
Landscape
Savannah,
Rainforest
Desert
Rain Forest
Rain Forest,
Savannah
Savannah
Savannah
Coast
None
Mediterranean
South Atlantic
South Atlantic
Indian Ocean
Atlantic and
Indian Ocean
European
Rulers (1914)
None
Great Britain
France
Portugal
Germany
Great Britain
Official
Languages
Independent
(Amharic)
Arabic
French
Portuguese
English, Swahili
English,
Afrikaans
Major
Resources
Coffee
Oil, Cotton,
Sugar, Tourism
Cocoa, Coffee
Oil, Diamonds
Tea, Safari Parks Gold, Copper,
Diamonds,
Safari Parks,
Tourism
Country Name
Return
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Introducing New Perspectives
Aspirations and Achievements
What did they
want to do?
What are they
doing now?
Return
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Aspirations and Achievements – Who???
Whose class size was 120?
Abay
Who trains teachers to teach English?
Dame / Abay
Who started primary school at 10 years old?
Albini
Whose father is a member of parliament?
Kwame
Who connects people to broadband?
Nseya
Who lives in the ‘city of gold’?
Carla
Who wanted to be Spiderman?
Ibraheem
Who likes playing tennis?
Abay
Whose favourite subject at school was Ndebele?
Chiko
Who likes picnics and braais?
Carla
Who has met the queen?
Albini
Whose primary school only had one classroom?
Dame
Who goes to work on a ferry?
Nseya
Who had to walk 6km to get to school?
Ibraheem
Who wanted to be a housemaid?
Chiko
Who is a Pastor?
Kwame
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
Return
Acknowledging Perceptual Change
Africa Questions - Reflection
Through the use of an Africa Questions
sheet pupils can reflect upon what they
have learnt and acknowledge
perceptual changes.
Have a look at the Africa Questions
sheets completed by Year 5 and 6
pupils.
What have they learnt and how have
their perceptions changed?
Return
GLP Conference , 12th May 2014
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